The Vancouver Canucks lamented a "sloppy" game devoid of scoring chances and played mostly in the neutral zone. That was music to the ears of a Detroit Red Wings team that had lost four straight and been outshot in eight of its past 10 games. Fittingly, the winning goal wasn't pretty either. Tomas Tatar scored his first goal of the season on a long wrist shot with 62 seconds left in the second period, and the Red Wings clamped down in the third to beat the Canucks 2-1 on Wednesday night.
"When we're careless with the puck and
careless with our structure we don't look very good,"
Detroit coach Mike Babcock said. "We're a team that needs to
play a certain way to be successful."
They played that way against the Canucks, limiting
the time spent in their own end and holding Vancouver to a season-low
20 shots.
"I've got to give the guys a lot of credit
tonight," said goalie Jimmy
Howard, who stopped 19 shots, including all seven he faced in the
third period. "They did a great job in front of me."
The same couldn't be said of the Canucks in front
of Luongo, at least not on Tatar's go-ahead goal late in the second
period.
"I just tried to shoot it on net and the
puck somehow ended up in," said Tatar, who played in his
fifth game of the season. "This is a big relief. Our line
played pretty well."
After Daniel
Alfredsson tied the game midway through the period, Tatar put
Detroit ahead with a shot off the rush from well above the top of the
right circle that caught defenseman Christopher
Tanev setting an inadvertent screen. Tanev lifted his foot at the
last instant in an effort to get out of the way, but Luongo never saw
the puck until it had gone between his legs.
"Obviously I didn't see it,"
Luongo said. "I think our defenseman was trying to cut across
to get the guy on the other side and I didn't see it until the last
second, but I have to find a way to find those. It's a pretty [lousy]
way to lose a game on a goal like that."
Daniel
Sedin scored Vancouver's lone goals and Luongo finished with 25
saves, including a couple of great point-blanks stops in the final
five minutes for the Canucks, who had their four-game winning streak
snapped.
"Don't blame Lui," said coach
John Tortorella, deferring on Tanev's decision until he reviewed the
play. "He gave us an opportunity to get back in that game in
the third. He made some really good saves."
Some of his best came against Datsyuk, who was
reunited with Henrik
Zetterberg on a top line with Todd
Bertuzzi. But it was the Canucks' No. 1 unit, with Ryan
Kesler moved up with Daniel and Henrik
Sedin, that opened the scoring late in the first period. After
making a drop pass to twin brother Henrik off the rush, Daniel faded
toward the right corner and took the return feed unchecked before
firing a sharp-angled shot into an empty net after Howard got
stranded atop his crease looking for a shot from Henrik. It was
Daniel's fourth goal and seventh point during a five-game point
streak; Henrik has three goals and 12 points during a 10-game point
streak of his own. The Sedins almost added to those totals midway
through the second period, but Howard slid hard from left to right
through his crease to deny Daniel on a backdoor one-timer after a
perfect cross-ice backhand pass from Henrik. Less than two minutes
later, Alfredsson tied it with his third goal since joining the Red
Wings as a free agent this past summer. The 40-year-old went to the
top of the crease and jammed at a loose puck that hit the post,
deflected off the back of Luongo's leg and slid over the goal line at
11:37.
"We were playing pretty good but had
nothing to show for it," Alfredsson said. "We get
the first one and then a fluke play where their defenseman ended up
being a screen and we get lucky. That's a huge goal for us, to go
into the third with the lead and I thought we handled that really
well."
The Sedins were back with Alexandre
Burrows for the third, and set him up for a shot in the slot that
he whiffed on, but were otherwise quiet.
"It was a sloppy game from both teams, a
lot of play in the neutral zone and turnovers and not a whole lot of
chances," Henrik said.
The Sedin twins weren't the only ones to struggle.
"We just looked lethargic,"
Tortorella said. "For some reason we lacked some energy
tonight. I thought throughout the game both teams, it was just kind
of one of those games. I just don't think we generated enough without
our energy."
The Canucks' power play, which is 4-for-43 and
dropped to 29th in the League, couldn't take advantage of an early
third-period opportunity, managing two shots. The Canucks ended the
night 0-for-3 with the extra man.
"It could have helped us tonight,"
Tortorella said of the struggling power play. "It wasn't good
tonight. The other nights it's been good. Tonight it wasn't good."
Luongo made up for the second goal with a
sprawling right pad save to take an apparent goal away from Justin
Abdelkader after a 3-on-1 backdoor pass from Tatar with five
minutes left. He also stuffed Bertuzzi from in tight 90 seconds
later. But the Canucks failed to take advantage, with Kesler
whistling a shot wide in the final seconds.
"I hit that shot nine out of 10 times and
I just missed it," Kesler said. "It's frustrating."
Frustrating and "sloppy" were sentiments
echoed by several Canucks, and those words were music to the Red
Wings ears.
"We had the puck a lot more because we
executed out of our defensive zone fast, we didn't waste a lot of
time in there and we got through neutral zone and in the end had way
more puck possession because of it and that's the right way to play,"
Babcock said. "Tonight was a good step for our team. Now
we've got to match it."
No comments:
Post a Comment